Snake Species Dinosaur species

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Diadophis punctatus vandenburgii - Monterey Ring-necked Snake

Diadophis punctatus vandenburgii - Monterey Ring-necked Snake - snake species | gveli | გველი

Diadophis punctatus vandenburgii - Monterey Ring-necked Snake

Mildly Venomous

Not considered dangerous to humans. Enlarged non-grooved teeth in the rear of the upper jaw and mild venom which may help to incapacitate small prey.

Size

8 - 34 inches long (20 - 87cm.)

Appearance

A small, thin snake with smooth scales. Gray, blue-gray, blackish, or dark olive dorsal coloring, with a bright orange to reddish underside, speckled with a few small black markings. The underside of the tail is a bright reddish orange. A narrow orange band around the neck, 1.5 - 2.5 scale rows wide.

Behavior

Secretive - usually found under the cover of rocks, wood, bark, boards and other surface debris, but occasionally seen moving on the surface on cloudy days, at dusk, or at night.

When disturbed, coils its tail like a corkscrew, exposing the underside which is usually bright red. It may also smear musk and cloacal contents.

Diet

Eats small salamanders, tadpoles, small frogs, small snakes, lizards, worms, slugs, and insects. The mild venom may help to incapacitate prey.

Reproduction

Lays eggs in the summer, sometimes in a communal nest.

Range

This subspecies, Diadophis punctatus vandenburgii - Monterey Ring-necked Snake, is endemic to California, occuring along the south-central California coast from Ventura County north to southern Santa Cruz County, and inland through the coast ranges.

The species Diadophis punctatus - Ring-necked Snake, has a very wide range, occuring along the entire east coast of the United States west to the Great Lakes and southwest from there through the Midwest into Arizona, with scattered isolated populations throughout most of the western states including the western half of California, Oregon west of the Cascades, and south central Washington.

Habitat

Prefers moist habitats, including wet meadows, rocky hillsides, riparian coridors, gardens, farmland, grassland, chaparral, mixed coniferous forests, woodlands.

Taxonomic Notes

Many herpetologists no longer recognize the traditional morphologically-based subspecies of Diadophis punctatus, pending a thorough molecular study of the whole species. One ongoing study (Feldman and Spicer, 2006, Mol. Ecol. 15:2201-2222) has found all of the D. punctatus subspecies in California (except D. p. regalis) to be indistinguishable. It is likely that D. punctatus is composed of several distinct lineages that do not follow the geographic ranges of the subspecies.

Bogertophis rosaliae (BC) - Baja California Rat Snake | Snake Species THORNSCRUB HOOK-NOSED SNAKE  <br />   Gyalopion quadrangulare | Snake Species  MOHAVE RATTLESNAKE <br /> Crotalus scutulatus | Snake Species
BLACK-TAILED RATTLESNAKE <br /> Crotalus molossus | Snake Species Lampropeltis zonata parvirubra - San Bernardino Mountain Kingsnake | Snake Species Rena humilis humilis - Southwestern Threadsnake | Snake Species
 COMMON KINGSNAKE  Lampropeltis getula | Snake Species Crotalus scutulatus scutulatus - Northern Mohave Rattlesnake | Snake Species Rena humilis humilis - Southwestern Threadsnake | Snake Species
PLAINS BLACK-HEADED SNAKE  <br />Tantilla nigriceps | Snake Species Diadophis punctatus vandenburgii - Monterey Ring-necked Snake | Snake Species Nerodia erythrogaster  - Plain-bellied Watersnake | Snake Species
Thamnophis atratus atratus - Santa Cruz Gartersnake | Snake Species Chionactis occipitalis talpina - Nevada Shovel-nosed Snake | Snake Species  EASTERN PATCH-NOSED SNAKE <br /> Salvadora grahamiae | Snake Species
Hypsiglena ochrorhyncha nuchalata - California Nightsnake | Snake Species SMITH'S BLACK-HEADED SNAKE <br /> Tantilla hobartsmithi | Snake Species Thamnophis couchii - Sierra Gartersnake | Snake Species
STRIPED WHIPSNAKE  Coluber taeniatus | Snake Species Bogertophis subocularis subocularis  - Trans-Pecos Ratsnake | Snake Species Trimorphodon lyrophanes - California Lyresnake | Snake Species

Copyright © 2012